Hemodynamics disorders

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HEMODYNAMIC DISORDERS, THROMBOEMBOLISM, AND SHOCK

Transcript of Hemodynamics disorders

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HEMODYNAMIC DISORDERS,THROMBOEMBOLISM, AND SHOCK

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Introduction• The health of cells and tissues depends on the circulation of blood.

• Normal – proteins in the plasma are retained within the vasculature- there is little net movement of water and

electrolytes into the tissues• Pathologic conditions alter endothelial function, increase vascular pressure, or decrease plasma protein content, all of which promote edema.

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• Edema (increased fluid in the ECF)

• Hyperemia (INCREASED flow)

• Congestion (INCREASED backup)

• Hemorrhage (extravasation)

• Hemostasis (opposite of thrombosis)

Overview

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• Hemostasis (opposite of thrombosis)

• Thrombosis (inappropriate clotting blood)

• Embolism (downstream travel of a clot)

• Infarction (death of tissues w/o blood)

• Shock (circulatory failure/collapse)

Overview

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Hyperemia

• an active process resulting from arteriolar dilation and increased blood inflow, as occurs at sites of inflammation or in exercising skeletal muscle

• Hyperemic tissues are redder than normal because of engorgement with oxygenated blood.

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Congestion

• a passive process resulting from impaired outflow of venous blood from a tissue

• It can occur systemically, as in cardiac failure, or locally as a consequence of an isolated venous obstruction.

• Congested tissues have an abnormal blue-red color (cyanosis) that stems from the accumulation of deoxygenated hemoglobin in the affected area.

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CONGESTION•LUNG

•ACUTE•CHRONIC

•LIVER•ACUTE•CHRONIC

•CEREBRAL

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Acute Pulmonary Congestion

•marked by blood-engorged alveolar capillaries and variable degrees of alveolar septal edema and intra-alveolar hemorrhage

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ACUTE PASSIVE HYPEREMIA/CONGESTION, LUNG

The typical picture of acute pulmonary edema is congested alveolar vessels with transudate inside of the alveoli.

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Chronic Pulmonary Congestion• the septa become thickened and fibrotic, and the alveolar spaces contain numerous macrophages laden with hemosiderin (“heart failure cells”) derived from phagocytosed red cells

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CHRONIC PASSIVE HYPEREMIA/CONGESTION, LUNG

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Acute Hepatic Congestion

• the central vein and sinusoids are distended with blood, and there may even be central hepatocyte dropout due to necrosis

• The periportal hepatocytes, better oxygenated because of their proximity to hepatic arterioles, experience less severe hypoxia and may develop only reversible fatty change.

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Acute Passive Congestion, Liver

The red “dots” are congested central veins.

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Chronic Passive Congestion of the liver• the central regions of the hepatic lobules, viewed on gross examination, are red-brown and slightly depressed (owing to cell loss) and are accentuated against the surrounding zones of uncongested tan, sometimes fatty liver (nutmeg liver)

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CHRONIC PASSIVE HYPEREMIA/CONGESTION, LIVER

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Flattened gyri – due to compression against the calvariumAn example of an organ which is edematous, but does not have room to swell.

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Edema

• is the result of the movement of fluid from the vasculature into the interstitial spaces; the fluid may be protein-poor (transudate) or protein-rich (exudate)

•Microscopic examination shows clearing and separation of the extracellular matrix elements.

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Edema

•Although any tissue can be involved, edema most commonly is encountered in subcutaneous tissues, lungs, and brain.

•ANASARCA - severe, generalized edema marked by profound swelling of subcutaneous tissues and accumulation of fluid in body cavities

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WATER• 60% of body• 2/3 of body water is INTRA-cellular• The rest is INTERSTITIAL• Only 5% is INTRA-vascular

• EDEMA is SHIFT to the INTERSTITIAL SPACE• HYDRO-

• -THORAX, -PERICARDIUM, -PERITONEAL• EFFUSIONS, ASCITES, ANASARCA

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Edema may be caused by:1. increased hydrostatic pressure (e.g., heart failure)2. increased vascular permeability (e.g., inflammation)

3. decreased colloid osmotic pressure, due to reduced plasma albumin

decreased synthesis (e.g., liver disease, protein malnutrition)increased loss (e.g., nephrotic syndrome)

4. lymphatic obstruction (e.g., inflammation or neoplasia).

5. sodium retention (e.g., renal failure)

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Subcutaneous Edema • can be diffused but usually accumulates preferentially in

parts of the body positioned the greatest distance below the heart where hydrostatic pressures are highest

• Thus, edema typically is most pronounced in the legs with standing and the sacrum with recumbency, a relationship termed dependent edema.

• Pitting edema - a finger-shaped depression when the finger leaves pressure over edematous subcutaneous tissue that displaces the interstitial fluid

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“Pitting” Edema

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Periorbital Edema

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Pulmonary Edema

• the lungs often are two to three times their normal weight, and sectioning reveals frothy, sometimes blood-tinged fluid consisting of a mixture of air, edema fluid, and extravasated red cells

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Brain edema

• can be localized (e.g., due to abscess or tumor) or generalized, depending on the nature and extent of the pathologic process or injury

• With generalized edema, the sulci are narrowed while the gyri are swollen and flattened against the skull.

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Hemorrhage

• defined as the extravasation of blood from vessels, occurs in a variety of settings

• Trauma, atherosclerosis, or inflammatory or neoplastic erosion of a vessel wall also may lead to hemorrhage, which may be extensive if the affected vessel is a large vein or artery.

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Hemorrhage: Manifestations• Hematoma – may be external or may accumulate in

tissues which ranges in significance from trivial (e.g., a bruise) to fatal (e.g., a massive retroperitoneal hematoma resulting from rupture of a dissecting aortic aneurysm)

• Examples - hemothorax, hemopericardium, hemoperitoneum, or hemarthrosis (in joints)

• Petechiae - minute (1 to 2 mm in diameter) hemorrhages into skin, mucous membranes, or serosal surfaces; causes

include low platelet counts (thrombocytopenia), defective platelet function, and loss of vascular wall support, as in vitamin C deficiency

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Hemorrhage: Manifestations• Purpura - slightly larger (3 to 5 mm) hemorrhages which

can result from the same disorders that cause petechiae, as well as trauma, vascular inflammation (vasculitis), and increased vascular fragility.

• Ecchymoses - larger (1 to 2 cm) subcutaneous hematomas (colloquially called bruises).

• Extravasated red cells are phagocytosed and degraded by macrophages; the characteristic color changes of a bruise are due to the enzymatic conversion of hemoglobin (red-blue color) to bilirubin (blue-green color) and eventually hemosiderin (golden-brown).

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A

B

A, Punctate petechial hemorrhages of the colonicmucosa, a consequence of thrombocytopenia. B, Fatal intracerebralhemorrhage.

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EVOLUTION of HEMORRHAGE

•ACUTE CHRONIC•PURPLE GREEN BROWN•HGB BILIRUBIN HEMOSIDERIN

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HEMOSTASIS AND THROMBOSIS

• Normal hemostasis comprises a series of regulated processes that maintain blood in a fluid, clot-free state in normal vessels while rapidly forming a localized hemostatic plug at the site of vascular injury.

• The pathologic counterpart of hemostasis is thrombosis, the formation of blood clot (thrombus) within intact vessels.

• Both hemostasis and thrombosis involve three elements: the vascular wall, platelets, and the coagulation cascade.

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A

B

Mural thrombi. A, Thrombus in the left and right ventricularapices, overlying white fibrous scar. B, Laminated thrombus in a dilatedabdominal aortic aneurysm. Numerous friable mural thrombi are alsosuperimposed on advanced atherosclerotic lesions of the more proximalaorta (left side of photograph).

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Low-power view of a thrombosed artery stained for elastic tissue. The original lumen is delineated by the internal elastic lamina (arrows) and is totally filled with organized thrombus.

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Embolism • An embolus is an intravascular solid, liquid, or gaseous

mass that is carried by the blood to a site distant from its point of origin.

• The vast majority of emboli derived from a dislodged thrombus—hence the term thromboembolism.

• The primary consequence of systemic embolization is ischemic necrosis (infarction) of downstream tissues, while embolization in the pulmonary circulation leads to hypoxia, hypotension, and right-sided heart failure.

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Embolus derived from a lower-extremity deep venousthrombus lodged in a pulmonary artery branch.

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Unusual types of emboli. A, Bone marrow embolus. The embolus is composed of hematopoietic marrow and marrow fat cells (clear spaces) attached to a thrombus. B, Amniotic fluid emboli. Two small pulmonary arterioles are packed with laminated swirls of fetal squamous cells. The surrounding lung is edematous and congested. (Courtesy of Dr. Beth Schwartz, Baltimore, Maryland.)

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Infarction

• An infarct is an area of ischemic necrosis caused by occlusion of the vascular supply to the affected tissue.

• Arterial thrombosis or arterial embolism underlies the vast majority of infarctions.

• Other uncommon causes of tissue infarction include vessel twisting (e.g., in testicular torsion or bowel volvulus), traumatic vascular rupture, and entrapment in a hernia sac.

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A B

Red and white infarcts. A, Hemorrhagic, roughly wedge-shaped pulmonary infarct (red infarct). B, Sharply demarcated pale infarct in the spleen (white infarct).

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Red Infarcts Occur (1)with venous occlusions (such as in ovarian torsion); (2)in loose tissues (e.g., lung) where blood can collect in infarcted zones; (3)in tissues with dual circulations such as lung and small intestine, where partial, inadequate perfusion by collateral arterial supplies is typical; (4)in previously congested tissues (as a consequence of sluggish venous outflow); and (5)when flow is reestablished after infarction has occurred (e.g., after angioplasty of an arterial obstruction).

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White Infarcts • occur with arterial occlusions in solid organs with end-arterial circulations (e.g., heart, spleen, and kidney), and where tissue density limits the seepage of blood from adjoining patent vascular beds

• Infarcts tend to be wedge-shaped, with the occluded vessel at the apex and the organ periphery forming the base.

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Remote kidney infarct, now replaced by a large fibrotic scar.

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Shock • the final common pathway for several potentially lethal

events, including exsanguination, extensive trauma or burns, myocardial infarction, pulmonary embolism, and sepsis

• characterized by systemic hypoperfusion of tissues; it can be caused by diminished cardiac output or by reduced effective circulating blood volume

• The consequences are impaired tissue perfusion and cellular hypoxia.

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ReferenceKumar V. et.al. 2013. Robbins Basic Pathology. 9th edition. Elsevier Saunders.